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This paper introduces a high-resolution building facade dataset-hznu_facade, designed to provide rich data support for urban modeling, digital twin city construction, and facade analysis tasks. The dataset comprises facade images of 624 buildings from Hangzhou, China, covering diverse architectural styles from both commercial and residential areas. Additionally, it offers twin versions of the facade images with perspective correction. To ensure data diversity, the dataset includes images captured under various lighting conditions, including challenging environments such as direct sunlight and backlighting. Furthermore, the dataset places particular emphasis on the annotation of window elements, offering high-density window information that significantly improves the capabilities for architectural element recognition and analysis. During the annotation process, this paper leverages existing segmentation models to assist in the labelling of architectural elements, covering six primary categories: buildings, cars, trees, windows, skies, and doors. The dataset annotates a total of 43,277 windows, far exceeding existing related datasets, highlighting its strong potential for building analysis, architectural element recognition, and virtual reality (VR) applications. This dataset provides an valuable benchmark for facade parsing algorithms, contributing to the advancement of research and development in this field.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12361793 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2025.111950 | DOI Listing |
Data Brief
October 2025
Zhejiang Lab, Intelligent Equipment Research Center, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China.
This paper introduces a high-resolution building facade dataset-hznu_facade, designed to provide rich data support for urban modeling, digital twin city construction, and facade analysis tasks. The dataset comprises facade images of 624 buildings from Hangzhou, China, covering diverse architectural styles from both commercial and residential areas. Additionally, it offers twin versions of the facade images with perspective correction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Conservation and Restoration, Faculty of Architecture, Islamic Azad University Central Tehran Branch, Tehran, Iran.
This study evaluates nanotechnology's application in restoring historical brick facades, specifically focusing on how montmorillonite clay nanoparticle spray effectively fills cracks and pores, thereby reducing porosity and decreasing water absorption. The research methodology involves controlled experiments on both historical and purchased brick samples, assessing the impact of nanospray through water absorption and porosity tests. The study seeks to mitigate surface water penetration to the bricks, as well as to fill the capillary cracks and pores that have formed due to various factors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCommun Eng
August 2025
Senseable City Lab, MIT, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Despite the variability of urban infrastructure, unreinforced masonry buildings remain globally prevalent. Constructed from brick, hollow concrete blocks, stone, or other masonry materials, these structures account for a significant proportion of fatalities during seismic events-particularly in regions with limited access to early warning systems. Due to the complex behavior of masonry, accurately assessing structural vulnerabilities is highly dependent on the chosen modeling strategy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethodsX
December 2025
Hochschule Burgenland University of Applied Sciences, Campus Pinkafeld, Steinamangerstraße 21, 7423 Pinkafeld, Austria.
Integrating renewable energy sources into buildings requires advanced control strategies to enhance demand-side flexibility. Data-driven Model Predictive Control (DMPC) has shown significant promise in this area. Buildings with Thermally Activated Building Structures (TABS) and glass façade present flexibility potential, but have a challenging thermal balance, due to high thermal inertia and significant solar gains.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSensors (Basel)
July 2025
Mechanical Engineering, Hanyang University, 222, Wangsimni-ro, Seoul 04763, Republic of Korea.
The increasing presence of high-rise buildings with curved and convex facades poses significant challenges for facade-cleaning robots, particularly in terms of mobility and anchoring. To address this, we propose a rope-riding mobile anchor (RMA) system capable of repositioning the anchor point of a cleaning robot on convex building surfaces. The RMA travels horizontally along a roof-mounted nylon rope using caterpillar tracks with U-shaped grooves, and employs a four-bar linkage mechanism to fix its position securely by increasing rope contact friction.
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